Citation Information

  • Title : Cover crop seeding rate effects on forage yields of oat and barley and underseeded bromegrass-alfalfa mixture.
  • Source : Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis
  • Publisher : Taylor & Francis
  • Volume : 42
  • Issue : 19
  • Pages : 2344-2350
  • Year : 2011
  • DOI : 10.1080/00103624
  • ISBN : 10.1080/00103624
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Foster, A.
    • Malhi, S.
  • Climates: Warm summer continental/Hemiboreal (Dsb, Dfb, Dwb).
  • Cropping Systems: Barley. Cover cropping. Oats. Perennial agriculture.
  • Countries: Canada.

Summary

Annual cover crops compete with underseeded perennial forages for light, moisture, and nutrients and may suppress their establishment and growth. Field experiments were established in 2000 and 2001 at Nipawin and in 2002 and 2003 at Melfort in northeastern Saskatchewan to determine the effects of seeding rates of cover crops of oat (19, 38, and 112 kg ha -1) and barley (31, 62, and 124 kg ha -1) on forage dry-matter yield (DMY) of the cover crop cut as greenfeed in the seeding year, DMY of the underseeded meadow bromegrass-alfalfa mixture in the following 1 or 2 years after establishment, and forage quality [concentration of crude protein (CP), acid detergent fiber (ADF) and neutral detergent fiber (NDF)]. In the first establishment year, the no cover crop treatment produced considerably less DMY than the treatments with cover crops. Oat seeded at 112 kg ha -1 produced greater DMY than when it was seeded at 19 or 38 kg ha -1 in all four site-years, but DMY differences between the 19 or 38 kg ha -1 seeding rates were not significant in any site-year. For barley, there was no significant difference in DMY among the three seeding rates in 2000, 2001, and 2002. In 2003, barley seeded at 62 or 124 kg ha -1 produced greater DMY than when it was seeded at 31 kg ha -1, but DMYs were not significantly different between the 62 and 124 kg ha -1 seeding rates. The use of a cover crop did reduce DMY in 2003 of bromegrass-alfalfa mixture underseeded in 2002, but the type of cover crop and its seeding rate did not appear to affect DMY in any site-year. Forage quality in the seeding year was consistently superior in no cover crop treatment compared to that in treatments with cover crops, especially related to CP concentration. There was no consistent trend of forage quality in the cover crop treatments, indicating cover crops and their seeding rates had little effect on forage quality. In conclusion, oat appeared to be more sensitive to seeding rate than barley for forage DMY in the establishment year, but in the subsequent 1 or 2 years after establishment there was little effect of cover crop type and its seeding rate on DMY of bromegrass-alfalfa mixture, although DMY was considerably greater in the no cover treatment than that in treatments with cover crops in 1 site-year.

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